Ouachita Men’s tennis ranked No. 6 in nation

The national and regional tennis rankings for the fall have been released with the Ouachita men’s tennis team ranked No. 6 in the nation and fourth in the South Region. (more…)

Tiger tennis finishes fall season strong

The Ouachita men’s tennis team wrapped up their fall campaign on Saturday, Oct. 31 at the Apache Invitational hosted by Tyler Junior College at the JoAnn Medlock Murphy Tennis Center. (more…)

Soldier, professor keeps faith during duty

Carrying out the orders of President Obama in Iraq and teaching two online college courses in Arkansas usually do not go hand in hand, unless you happen to be Terry DeWitt.
(more…)

Online Signal wins 2009 Pacemaker award, highest ACP honor for online student publications

Whether academic, athletic, or personal, success remains a common theme of Ouachita and has grown to become the standard for future expectations. One publication, the online Signal, takes this success to a new level with a high caliber of exquisite work in a short amount of time through winning a 2009 Pacemaker award.
(more…)

Expectations high for young team

The Tigers are building a foundation for the future, and after two exhibition games, first year head coach Mark Price and assistant coach Sean Rutigliano are confident in the team’s direction. (more…)

Pulitzer Prize winner visits campus

About this time last year, Andrew Stephens, a graduate of Ouachita, demanded that Dr. Johnny Wink, professor of English, purchase Douglas Hofstadter’s book “Le Ton Beau de Marot: In Praise of the Music of Language.” Dr. Wink obeyed and was soon in awe of both the book and the author.

“I did what Andrew told me. I went to my computer. I got on Amazon. I ordered up the book. It came. I began to read it. And I was bewitched,” Wink said. “I realized I was in the presence of a great of writer as I’ve ever been in the presence of.“

The great American thinker Douglas Hofstadter won the Pulitzer Prize and the American Book Award for his work “Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid.”

But Hofstadter is not only a writer. He is a physics professor, linguist and pianist. Yet it does not stop there. While his official title at the University of Indiana is Professor of Cognitive Science and Computer Science and director of its Center for Research on concepts and cognition, he holds several departmental chairs. But the man does not dabble. He excels.

And as for his physics, according to Indiana University’s online faculty description, in graduate school, Hofstadter discovered that “crystal electrons in magnetic fields have a beautiful self-similar energy spectrum, the graph of which has since been dubbed the ‘Hofstadter butterfly.’”

As the result of correspondence between Wink, Hofstadter and professor of English Jay Curlin, Hofstadter lectured in Mabee Recital Hall on Sunday night. He shared his passion and skill for Russian translation.

He read aloud from several translations, including his own, of Pushkin’s novel in verse “Eugene Onegin.” He combined portions of the translations to form an abbreviated version of the novel, thus allowing the audience to peruse the text, an experience he described by using the metaphor of flying in a Concord.

First he explained the importance of Pushkin and the beauty of the novel.

“I want to give a sense by some anecdotes the importance of Pushkin,” Hofstadter said. “And the importance of ‘Eugene Onegin’ in particular.”

He described his personal experience with this Russian novel in verse.

“My wife and I had just finished reading ‘The Pickwick Papers’ aloud to each other, and we were looking for something else to read and I said, ‘Look, I’ve a crazy idea, I’ve got two translations of this Russian novel that inspired Vikram Seth and one is the one that inspired him and the other is by this other random American, so why don’t we just read the two together … and that’s what we did.”

Hofstadter and his wife were bewitched by a certain one of the translations, and Hofstadter describes an enlightening revelation he experienced when talking to his babysitter.

“We happened by pure chance to have a Russian who was babysitting for us at the time,” Hofstader said. “And one day we were down in the kitchen and I said to Marina, I said a rather naïve question, ‘Carol and I are reading ‘Eugene Onegin.’’ Have you ever read the novel’ I later came to understand that asking a Russian that question is like asking an American ‘Have you ever heard of baseball?’ And you know, she laughed, and said yes, that she had memorized the entire novel when she was a teenager.”

Hofstadter laments America’s lack of appreciation for the beauty of both his own translation and other beautiful translations of Pushkin. He is at a loss to understand why Americans are so apathetic towards “Eugene Onegin.” After the lecture, he lamented the imperialism of American culture due to large enterprises such as Coca Cola and McDonalds, and he praised the Russian ability to love poetry and to inculcate that same passion in their youth.

Hofstadter earned a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics from Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif., and both a master’s and doctorate in physics from the University of Oregon in Eugene. n

Player Profile: Josh Raine

Michael Joshua Raine is a senior business management and marketing major from Little Rock. He is a member of the Tiger basketball team. (more…)

Lady Tigers defeat Philander Smith

The Ouachita women’s basketball team got back on track Monday with a 100-70 victory over Philander Smith College in the non-conference home opener at Bill Vining Arena in Arkadelphia.

(more…)

Bubble Briefs: Inside

Ouachita Singers is sponsoring a movie poster sale in Verser Theater on Monday, Nov. 23, from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
(more…)

Ouachita Baptist signs four student-athletes for baseball program

Ouachita Baptist University Head Baseball Coach Chris Moddelmog announced the signing of four student-athletes to National Letter of Intents to begin at Ouachita Baptist in the fall of 2010. (more…)